Times Colonist

Island Voices

Court verdict on extreme intoxicati­on fails the common-sense test

- LAWRIE McFARLANE jalmcfarla­ne@shaw.ca

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled, unanimousl­y, that extreme intoxicati­on is a valid legal defence in the case of violent crimes like rape and murder.

The case revolved around a 1995 Act of Parliament that prohibited the extreme intoxicati­on defence. The statute was prompted, in part, by a series of notguilty verdicts that shocked the nation, such as the acquittal of a drunk man who raped a woman in her wheelchair.

There had also been demands by women’s groups who believed they were entitled to protection from such assaults.

Apparently, the court found this latter an unenlighte­ned view, pointing out that the law’s “impact on the principles of fundamenta­l justice is disproport­ionate to its overarchin­g public benefits. It should therefore be declared unconstitu­tional and of no force or effect.”

Or, as Justice Nicholas Kasirer opined, writing for the court, “a person’s decision to become intoxicate­d does not mean they intended to commit a violent offence.” Let’s take this one step at a time. First, it’s difficult to determine what the court thinks intent actually means. The justices appear to think that if some causal factor — in this case drunkennes­s — supervenes, then intent goes out the window. Yet a variety of causal factors underlie human behaviour, some of which may be difficult to wrestle with.

Kleptomani­a and pedophilia, for example, may lie beyond the ability of given individual­s to control. Yet we don’t let that indisputab­le fact get in the way of convicting them.

There certainly are some actions that someone under the influence of alcohol or drugs may be unable to control — falling down, slurring words or vomiting. But if an intoxicate­d man can summon the will and physical self-mastery to break into a woman’s bedroom, overpower and rape her, can we really say he doesn’t know what he’s doing? That he didn’t intend it?

Well yes, that is exactly what Kasirer is saying, and so said all nine justices of the court.

This fails the test of common sense, and more so, commonly understood usage around such terms as “intent,” “deliberate” and “choice.”

I know of no theory of action, a field I spent 10 years studying, that sustains such abuse of language, and certainly none that should command the unanimous adherence of nine highly trained jurists.

Again, we expect our justice system to sustain the fundamenta­l requiremen­ts of a well-functionin­g society, first among them self-restraint and respect for others. But those principles go out the window here.

When a court can find no overarchin­g public benefit in locking up an inebriated murderer, we’re entitled to ask by what standard the public benefit is measured.

Lastly, the fact that the opinion was unanimous, while the matter at stake is clearly contentiou­s and capable of more than one judgment, is deeply troubling.

In parliament­ary affairs, a threeline whip is issued to members of the governing party when an unpopular decision is to be taken and dissent is not permitted.

It feels very much as if that happened here. That nine judges voted in lockstep on such a controvers­ial issue looks more like politics than law.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Supreme Court Justice Nicholas Kasirer wrote in the decision that a person’s decision to become intoxicate­d does not mean they intended to commit a violent offence, but Lawrie McFarlane asks: If an intoxicate­d man can summon the will and physical self-mastery to break into a woman’s bedroom, overpower and rape her, can we really say he doesn’t know what he’s doing?
ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Supreme Court Justice Nicholas Kasirer wrote in the decision that a person’s decision to become intoxicate­d does not mean they intended to commit a violent offence, but Lawrie McFarlane asks: If an intoxicate­d man can summon the will and physical self-mastery to break into a woman’s bedroom, overpower and rape her, can we really say he doesn’t know what he’s doing?
 ?? ??

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